look at or respond to local population needs and the wider factors affecting health and people’s ability to make healthy life choices

contribute to ‘healthy places’ (integrated services for local populations) including sustainability and transformation plans

take life course approaches to prevention and care (for every aspect of a person’s life, from beginning to end), supporting resilience and independence

Whatever your role, by working together we can be a force for change and contribute to a culture of health in our society.

Why All Our Health is needed

In England, people are living longer, but often in poorer health.

We know that what people eat, or whether they smoke or keep active, are behaviours that have a big impact on their health.

And we also know that in poorer parts of the country people have lower life expectancy and fewer years of living in good health.

Front-line professionals understand more than anyone about the pressures of increasing demand on health and social care at the same time as tighter budgets. Managing this demand is part of the day to day work of surgeries, clinics and wards across the country.

Debates on how to best approach these issues have often focused on how we run our services but it’s now widely accepted that preventing people becoming ill in the first place – protecting or improving their health before they need treatment – has a massive part to play.

This is now officially recognised in important strategic publications like the NHS Five Year Forward View which asks us all to increase this ‘prevention’ activity, and more and more front-line health and care professionals are answering this call.

Helping healthcare professionals make an impact

Health and care practitioners are amongst the most trusted members of our community, privileged to have millions of contacts with patients every day and shape and deliver services at the front line, so your work to prevent as well as treat ill health is absolutely crucial.

Across the country, we see great examples of front-line professionals building their knowledge about the wider impact of our lifestyles on health and using this to help patients or the community.

But we also know that time is limited, particularly time with patients where it can be difficult to have those vitally important conversations about wellbeing, as well as addressing the immediate problem or symptom.

All Our Health is a resource that helps front-line health and care professionals develop the role they can play, providing the information you need to make an impact.

This includes topic-specific information, for instance looking at how you can help focus on important lifestyle risk factors like physical inactivity, smoking or alcohol.

And we also look at how every professional can play a role in combating problems like antibiotic resistance or pressure ulcers.

Bringing all of this together also means having the skills and confidence to talk to patients about their lifestyle and then provide information that will help them make healthy choices.

Imagine the impact if tens of thousands more front-line health professionals built this ‘prevention’ activity into their practice. This work will reduce the human cost of ill health (which often hits the poorest in our society hardest) and reduce pressure on our health and social services at the same time.

Involving all healthcare professionals

The All Our Health resource is constantly evolving by taking on feedback from healthcare practitioners, leaders and educators.

We want the resource to be used by:

all healthcare professionals – it provides evidence and guidance to help you carry out the prevention and population health elements of your role

professional leaders and managers - to develop services that use the knowledge and skills of healthcare professionals to give the best health outcomes for the populations they serve

educators - to provide information to inform curricular development and to teach the role of population health in healthcare undergraduate and postgraduate programmes

researchers - to provide evidence for research questions based on local and national priorities, informing grant applications

national professional leaders - to guide policy development based on what works well, and raise the national profile of healthcare professionals by making their contribution to population health visible

Help us improve GOV.UK

Help us improve GOV.UK

To help us improve GOV.UK, we’d like to know more about your visit today. We’ll send you a link to a feedback form. It will take only 2 minutes to fill in. Don’t worry we won’t send you spam or share your email address with anyone.